It remains to be seen how former marketing director Anucha Browne-Sanders’ sexual harassment lawsuit against Isiah Thomas plays out in a court of law. But in the court of public opinion, in the streets outside Penn Plaza and in the seats of Madison Square Garden, the Knicks’ GM largely has been found not guilty.

“It’s all about the almighty dollar. It’s not about what Isiah did,” said George Fuller of Poughkeepsie, adding that if Thomas weren’t rich and famous, the suit never would have been filed.

“It wouldn’t happen. [He’s a] public figure, in the city of New York. The guy’s semi-controversial, but good for the Knicks. If he holds his calm, he’ll be fine . . . if he’s innocent, which I think he is.”

By now, every sports fan in the city, and many across the country have been besieged with the he-said, she-said “facts” of the case. Browne-Sanders, 43, claimed she was harassed, and the Knicks fired back that she was just looking to become the Six Million Dollar Woman.

“She’s out for the money,” Long Islander Alan Sobel said. “I think it gets settled out of court; they shouldn’t get rid of him.”

The vast majority of fans The Post interviewed yesterday agreed, with the few dissenters ripping Thomas largely out of bias brought on by his poor trades.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if it’s true. I believe it. I think he’s wrong. He abused his power,” said Rochelle Clarke of The Bronx.

Her husband, Sadiki, said, “I don’t like Isiah. I don’t think the moves he makes help. It wouldn’t surprise me. He seems like a very sneaky kind of guy undercover. The deals he made are garbage; if they fire him, it might be for the best.”

Other fans supported the beleaguered Hall of Famer, most with more fervor than team owner Jim Dolan did with his prepared statement but conspicuous absence.

“I think he didn’t do it, and people are opportunistic, especially when people are vulnerable,” Manhattan’s Perry Cyprus said. “But people also have to be professional, and some people are more sensitive than others. People think he’s a leader; he has to act like one. But I think he’s innocent.”